covid19 has probably been circulating the globe for over a year now.
major lag factor to actually catch on to an invisible bug
major lag factor to actually catch on to an invisible bug
This reads like one of those emails my great aunt would forward to the entire family when that was cool 20 years ago.Harrison Wells said:Quote:
Helpful information from
Juliana Grant, a physician and infectious disease epidemiologist from the Seattle area.
Hi folks,
A number of you have asked me what I think is going to happen with coronavirus (COVID-19) and what we should be doing to prepare. I have a few thoughts about what's likely to happen and what you should do about it. For those of you who don't know me well, I am a preventive medicine physician and infectious disease epidemiologist. I graduated from the CDC's Epidemic Intelligence Service and have over 17 years of experience in the field, most of that with CDC.
Wishing everyone good health,
Juliana
Who should I listen to?
The CDC and your state health department are your best place for information about COVID-19. Be cautious about other sources of information - many of them will not be reliable or accurate.
How bad is this going to be?
It's possible that COVID-19 will be similar to a bad flu year but there are a number of indications that it will be very much like the 1918 Flu Pandemic. To put that in perspective, the 1918 flu did not end civilization as we know it but it was the second-deadliest event of the last 200 years. Expect people you know to die from this.
However, there is one critical difference between COVID-19 and the 1918 flu - the 1918 flu virus hit children and young adults particularly hard. COVID-19 seems to be most severe in older adults. Children and young adults generally have mild infections. We are grateful for this.
What can we expect?
This is not the zombie apocalypse. Core infrastructure (e.g., power, water, supermarkets, internet, government, etc.) will continue to work, perhaps with some minor disruptions.
There will be significant economic disruption: a global recession is very possible and there will probably be significant shortages of some products. The healthcare system will be hit the hardest. The number of people who are likely to get sick is higher than our healthcare systems can handle.
Daily life will be impacted in important ways. Travel is likely to be limited and public gatherings will probably be canceled. Schools will probably be closed. Expect health departments to start issuing these orders in the near future, especially on the West Coast.
The acute pandemic will probably last at least for several months and quite possibly for a year or two.
What can we do?
We can't keep COVID-19 from being a global pandemic but the more we can do to slow the spread of the disease, the less severe the impact will be. With that in mind, here are the things you can do:
Stay calm but take it seriously. This will likely be bad but it's not the apocalypse.
Stay home if you're sick or someone in your house is sick.
Leave medical supplies for healthcare workers. You shouldn't be stockpiling masks or other medical supplies. They are needed in hospitals to keep our healthcare workers healthy.
Wash your hands. Get in the habit of frequently washing your hands thoroughly and covering your cough.
Minimize your exposure. Now that we're seeing community transmission, it's time to start seriously cutting back on your exposure to other people. Depending on your circumstances:
Cancel all non-essential travel (and most of it is non-essential!)
Avoid large-scale gatherings
Work from home if possible
Minimize direct contact with others including hand shakes and hugs
Reduce your trips out of the house. If possible, shop for two weeks of groceries at once or consider having your groceries delivered.
Remember, keep calm and prepare. This is likely to be bad but if we respond calmly and thoughtfully we can handle it.
Feel free to share this email as you see fit.
**************************
Juliana Grant, MD MPH
Public health and epidemiology consultant
juliana@julianagrant.com
Quote:
How bad is this going to be?
It's possible that COVID-19 will be similar to a bad flu year but there are a number of indications that it will be very much like the 1918 Flu Pandemic.
Quote:
The healthcare system will be hit the hardest. The number of people who are likely to get sick is higher than our healthcare systems can handle.
Tanya 93 said:When should everything be shut down?ac04 said:
i'm not even going to engage with you because your entire strategy in disagreements is to take extreme positions and be intentionally obtuse. you're not capable of rational debate.
I get being asked when we cannot leave our homes is a hard question, but when should it occur?
Tonight?
Tomorrow?
Sunday so people can get paid on Friday and shop?
Nuclear Scramjet said:
Oh no no no.
Quote:
CDC has had their primer sequences and assay posted for a while now. I'm actually kind of shocked that this wasn't done sooner. PCR takes hours to get optimized if you have the right setup, as I'm sure most research hospitals do. The slowest part is going to be ordering oligos, which can happen in 24 hr turnaround for regular business.
At least that was the case the last time I designed PCR assays more than 7 years ago.
Another short article by herk2aggie07 said:
Source
https://www.julianagrant.com/blog/2020/2/29/coronavirus
Quote:
A few folks have asked me how COVID-19 is similar to the 1918 flu. There are two main things I'm considering when I say that.
[ol]Mortality rate: The early reports of COVID-19 are showing a mortality rate of 1.5-3%, meaning that 1.5-3% of people who are infected die. This is approximately 10-30 times higher than the mortality associated with seasonal flu in the U.S. and in the same general vicinity as 1918 flu.
But (there is always a but), as with interpreting any science, there are some key things to consider. For one, it's possible that there are a large number of people with mild, undiagnosed COVID-19 infection. If this is the case, the actual mortality rate is much lower. For another, most of the data are from China where many people smoke and medical care is probably not as strong as in the U.S. Both of these factors could make COVID-19 mortality rates seen to date higher than what we would see here. A final thing to consider is that the mortality rates for both seasonal flu and the 1918 flu are estimates, so our comparisons are not perfect.Transmission rate: Early reports indicate that each person with COVID-19 infection gives the virus to more than two other people (on average). This is referred to as the transmission rate. There are other factors to consider, but in general the higher the transmission rate the more cases we will see. We think the transmission rate for seasonal flu is less than two but the 1918 flu transmission rate is about the same as what we're seeing with COVID-19. Again, these are estimates and we don't yet know if they are correct. [/ol]
But even then its a matter of degree - one has to determine the appropriate personal risk levels based on size of the event, possible exposure and contact with others, proximity to the known cases, personal general health, etcQuote:
Limiting mass gatherings is the goal. The reason is exactly what cone mentioned... to modify the R0 of the communities to the point where the spread is no longer at pandemic levels. If that can be accomplished by practicing better hygiene, avoiding places where many people gather as much as possible, then we should probably do that... without being ordered as such by the government. When the government has to order that, its already too late.
Congo and other Central African countries.....OverSeas AG said:
As I said... there is a ton of commerce between the two countries. It only took Chinese in Iran to go home for Chinese New Year and then return to Iran after it was over to start spreading it.
I guarantee you that other countries that have a lot of commerce (and I mean interchanges of Chinese nationals) with China are also highly impacted, they are just not reporting it yet - for various reasons.
Do you have a SA trip planned this year?B-1 83 said:Congo and other Central African countries.....OverSeas AG said:
As I said... there is a ton of commerce between the two countries. It only took Chinese in Iran to go home for Chinese New Year and then return to Iran after it was over to start spreading it.
I guarantee you that other countries that have a lot of commerce (and I mean interchanges of Chinese nationals) with China are also highly impacted, they are just not reporting it yet - for various reasons.
Next time you need heart surgery, you should hire a plumber. After all, it's just a pump with valves. No difference.JP_Losman said:
yep epidemiologists overstate this stuff- bc its what they have prepared their whole lives for.
It gives meaning to their careers!!!
"Don't you tell me you know more about an epidemic than me! I'm an epidemiologist!"
"Everyone is gonna die!!! My degree makes me an expert!!"
Nuclear Scramjet said:
Oh no no no.
This is undoubtedly true.VaultingChemist said:Another short article by herk2aggie07 said:
Source
https://www.julianagrant.com/blog/2020/2/29/coronavirus
How is Covid-19 like the 1918 Spanish FluQuote:
A few folks have asked me how COVID-19 is similar to the 1918 flu. There are two main things I'm considering when I say that.
[ol]Mortality rate: The early reports of COVID-19 are showing a mortality rate of 1.5-3%, meaning that 1.5-3% of people who are infected die. This is approximately 10-30 times higher than the mortality associated with seasonal flu in the U.S. and in the same general vicinity as 1918 flu.
But (there is always a but), as with interpreting any science, there are some key things to consider. For one, it's possible that there are a large number of people with mild, undiagnosed COVID-19 infection. If this is the case, the actual mortality rate is much lower. For another, most of the data are from China where many people smoke and medical care is probably not as strong as in the U.S. Both of these factors could make COVID-19 mortality rates seen to date higher than what we would see here. A final thing to consider is that the mortality rates for both seasonal flu and the 1918 flu are estimates, so our comparisons are not perfect.Transmission rate: Early reports indicate that each person with COVID-19 infection gives the virus to more than two other people (on average). This is referred to as the transmission rate. There are other factors to consider, but in general the higher the transmission rate the more cases we will see. We think the transmission rate for seasonal flu is less than two but the 1918 flu transmission rate is about the same as what we're seeing with COVID-19. Again, these are estimates and we don't yet know if they are correct. [/ol]
As far as mortality rates go, Covid-19 would probably be much higher if it occurred in 1918.
MouthBQ98 said:
Yes, stop idiotically risky overseas travel, and back off unnecessary public gathering and intermingling for a couple of months and this thing dies off here. It needs hosts and needs opportunities to spread to persist. If we all cut down on public contact with others and take care to be extra hygienic, we can defeat it.
This is the reaction I've gotten from everyone I know with rodeo tickets. None I have talked to are considering not going.Rustys-Beef-o-Reeno said:MouthBQ98 said:
Yes, stop idiotically risky overseas travel, and back off unnecessary public gathering and intermingling for a couple of months and this thing dies off here. It needs hosts and needs opportunities to spread to persist. If we all cut down on public contact with others and take care to be extra hygienic, we can defeat it.
**** that I have rodeo tickets
Except all it takes is a few idiots to go out when sick.tysker said:
Interestingly the worst cases in the US are localized in a nursing home where the infected didnt appear to attend any public gatherings or have unnecessary intermingling.
Exactly. That's why I brought it here. And thanks to k2aggie07 for providing a source link.VaultingChemist said:Quote:
How bad is this going to be?
It's possible that COVID-19 will be similar to a bad flu year but there are a number of indications that it will be very much like the 1918 Flu Pandemic.Quote:
The healthcare system will be hit the hardest. The number of people who are likely to get sick is higher than our healthcare systems can handle.
At least we are getting some good info from a qualified epidemiologist.